From a sermon by Saint Augustine
The martyrs' deaths are made precious by the death of Christ |
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African Marytrs |
Through
such glorious deeds of the holy martyrs, with which the Church blossoms
everywhere, we prove with our own eyes how true it is, as we have just
been singing, that precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his saints;
seeing that it is precious both in our sight and in the sight of him
for the sake of whose name it was undertaken. But the price of these
deaths is the death of one man. How many deaths were bought with one
dying man, who was the grain of wheat that would not have been
multiplied if he had not died! You have heard his words when he was
drawing near to our passion, that is, when he was drawing near to our
redemption: Unless the grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.
On the cross, you see, Christ transacted a grand
exchange; it was there that the purse containing our price was untied;
when his side was laid open by the lance of the executioner, there
poured out from it the price of the whole wide world. The faithful were
bought, and the martyrs; but the faith of the martyrs has been proved,
and their blood is the witness to it. The martyrs have paid back what
was spent for them, and they have fulfilled what Saint John says: Just as Christ laid down his life for us, so we too should lay down our lives for the brethren. And in another place it says, You
have sat down at a great table; consider carefully what is set before
you, since you ought to prepare the same kind of thing yourself. It
is certainly a great table, where the Lord of the table is himself the
banquet. No-one feeds his guests on himself; that is what the Lord
Christ did, being himself the host, himself the food and drink.
Therefore the martyrs recognised what they ate and drank, so that they
could give back the same kind of thing.
But from where could they give back the same kind of
thing, if the one who made the first payment had not given them the
means of giving something back? What shall I pay back to the Lord for all the things he has paid back to me? I will receive the cup of salvation.
What is this cup? The bitter but salutary cup of suffering, the cup
which the invalid would fear to touch if the doctor did not drink it
first. That is what this cup is; we can recognise this cup on the lips
of Christ, when he says, Father, if it can be so, let this cup pass from me. It is about this cup that the martyrs said, I will receive the cup of salvation and call upon the name of the Lord.
So are you not afraid of failing at this point? No? Why not? Because I will call upon the name of the Lord. How could the martyrs ever conquer, unless that one conquered in them who said Rejoice, since I have conquered the world?
The emperor of the heavens was governing their minds and tongues, and
through them overcoming the devil on earth and crowning the martyrs in
heaven. O, how blessed are those who drank this cup thus! They have
finished with suffering and have received honour instead.
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